Stick to baseball, 11/2/19.

This isn’t quite new, but I put out a formal announcement this week that my second book, The Inside Game: Bad Calls, Strange Moves, and What Baseball Behavior Teaches Us About Ourselves, will be out on April 21, 2020. You can pre-order it now on HarperCollins’ site.

On the board gaming front, I ranked the top 25 board games of the 2010s for Paste this week, and also wrote about some recent programming games, where players issue instructions as if they were writing code, over at Ars Technica. I also held a Klawchat on Thursday.

You can get more of me by signing up for my free email newsletter, which I send out irregularly but definitely not often enough to bother you.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. So I noticed your link to this article at Twitter and some asking if your website is down. I ran into the same issue, but the problem isn’t that the site is down. It looks like it isn’t rendering. This only occurs for me when I’m using cellular data to load the page and whether I used Chrome or Safari on my phone. On my home WiFi, it is fine.

    I looked at it a little closer and there are pages that load without an issue. Your language interview pages load without a problem, so the URL isn’t being blocked by AT&T. This leads me to suspect that AT&T may not like a WordPress plug-in or an API. I did see a 403 (forbidden) when looking at developer tools. It was for freegeoip.net/shutdown, though it is probably something else. Maybe WordPress knows of the issue?

    As for interesting links, the state of Missouri tracks women’s menstruation cycles at the state’s only abortion clinic.

    https://www.vox.com/2019/10/31/20939890/missouri-abortion-clinic-hearing-periods-roe-wade

  2. Dave in Delaware

    Hi, Keith!

    Can’t wait for the new book!

    I’m a fellow Delawarean (transplant). Any thoughts on who might be a good person to face Coons in the primary? I’m genuinely interested, but understand if this isn’t a venue where you would want to discuss this.

    Love your work!
    Dave

  3. It’s not particularly shocking to hear that AirBnB is rife with scammers. As callous as it may sound, we should expect the gig/sharing economy to carry greater risk. That just seems inherent to the model. What you gain in options or flexibility or pricing over the traditional accommodations market is offset by sacrifices in quality control, professionalism, and the like. That doesn’t excuse intentionally dishonest or illegal behavior and AirBnB should be held accountable. But one way to do so is by not using the service. If you think ANY new entrant into a market is going to be all benefits with no downside, you’re just not understanding how the world works.

    I’d be curious to learn if there are serial scammers on the guest side, which may help explain AirBnB’s seeming ambivalence on the matter. I have a friend who hosts via a basement apartment in his home. He’s had a couple horror stories but they all seem to just be bad guests and not scammers. But I imagine the latter exist.

  4. At the risk of coming off glib, there are tons of things I’d rather see go away in the name of climate preservation before I would want chocolate to go away. The internet and computers can go first as far as I’m concerned.

  5. andrew stead

    Keith–I’m in the same boat as Chris P. from the last chat. I’d love it if you join the Athletic, but if you re-up with ESPN can you please negotiate to be able to send a subscription-fee newsletter with your Insider content to foreigners? Aside from wanting excellent content, it would be nice to see (a) ESPN recognize that with the current arrangement it’s treating long-time customer poorly and (b) a guy who had to divide by 2 recently (e.g. divorce) maximize the value of his work product.

    Cheers.